During April came one of the most important announcements on mental health
care since I set up shop at the Department of Health. Thirty million pounds of
new money is to be spent on refurbishing in-patient units, starting in this
financial year. It is an acknowledgement that some of our wards are bleak and
shabby, unsuitable for the care of distressed or disturbed people.

The story was headline news throughout the day. BBC television illustrated
it with film of what a ward looks like, although the one they showed was
nothing like as bad as some of the ones I have visited lately.

The refurbishment initiative is much more than a makeover. This year, using
money that came to health in the Budget, units in every English region, 18 in
total, chosen on a ‘worst-first’ principle, will rid themselves of
cramped space and dilapidated decor. But most of the money will come next year
and the decisions on which units can expect to get it are yet to be made and
can still be influenced.

The announcement is part of a broader plan to improve in-patient care and
with it the moral of ward staff. Research on in-patient care will be a
national research and development priority. Guidance will be issued on
tackling drug misuse on wards. A new group, reporting to the Mental Health
Task Force — set up to put the NHS Plan into practice — will
report on what else is needed, including treatment skills and training. Added
to this is the requirement to remove fixed curtain rails — the means of
hanging in many in-patient suicides — by March 2002. Another necessity
is to meet the Patient's Charter target on single gender accommodation (not
wards, as is often said) by December the same year.

All this is intended to transform in-patient care. It also makes clear that
wards are an essential part of a comprehensive local service, not the poor
relation. In retrospect the emphasis in the NHS Plan on strengthening
community services may have given that impression, but it wasn't the
intention.

Instead, the new teams that the NHS Plan has launched nationally are
intended to solve a problem: the failings in community care, which have lost
the confidence of patients, their families and the public. Too often we lose
contact with vulnerable people. Patients who could safely be looked after at
home must instead be admitted to wards that are already stretched. It takes
too long for young people in their first episode of illness to receive
treatment. Hence, new teams offering assertive outreach, home treatment and
early intervention.

I don't dispute that the evidence for these services could be better, but
the pressing need to solve the immediate problems means taking decisions on
the best evidence available, even when this is not complete. It is arguable
that we should wait for several major randomised controlled trials and a
Cochrane Review on each intervention, but this would take much, much longer.
People have criticised the NHS Plan for being ideological, but in fact it is
driven by pragmatism.

There is one other point that is often overlooked in the debate about
service models, although it is the most important point about the NHS Plan for
those of us in mental health. Our status as one of the three clinical
priorities will for the next decade open doors on funding for clinical
developments and research, on the work programmes of the National Institute
for Clinical Excellence and the Commission for Health Improvement and on many
other things — the money for in-patient refurbishment is itself a direct
consequence. The most important thing about the NHS Plan is that we are in
it.